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he AgeOf Napoleon2
Recent Titles in Greenwood Guides to Historic Events 1500-1900 The Dreyfus Affair Leslie Derfler The War of 1812 David S. Heidler and Jeanne T. Heidler The Atlantic Slave Trade Johannes Postma Manifest Destiny DavidS. Heidler and Jeanne T. Heidler American Railroads in the Nineteenth Century Augustus J. Veenendaal Reconstruction Claudine L. Ferrell The Spanish-American War Kenneth E. Hendrickson, Jr. The American Revolution Joseph C. Morton The French Revolution Linda S. Frey and Marsha L. Frey The French and Indian War Alfred A. Cave The Lewis and Clark Expedition Harry William Fritz The Second Great Awakening and the Transcendentahsts Barry Hankins
The Age of Napoleon
SUSAN P. CONNER
Greenwood Guides to Historic Events 1500-1900 Linda S. Frey and Marsha L. Frey, Series Editors
GREENWOOD PRESS Westport, Connecticut • London
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Conner, Susan P. (Susan Punzel), 1947The age of Napoleon / Susan P. Conner. p. cm.—(Greenwood guides to historic events 1500-1900, ISSN 1538-442X) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0 - 3 1 3 - 3 2 0 1 4 - 4 (alk. paper) 1. Napoleon I, Emperor of the French, 1769-1821. 2. France—History— Consulate and First Empire, 1799-1815. I. Title. II. Series. DC201.C64 2004 944.05—dc22 2003060132 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is available. Copyright © 2004 by Susan P. Conner All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, by any process or technique, without the express written consent of the publisher. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2003060132 ISBN: 0 - 3 1 3 - 3 2 0 1 4 - 4 ISSN: 1538-442X First published in 2004 Greenwood Press, 88 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06881 An imprint of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc. www. greenwood, corn Printed in the United States of America
" The paper used in this book complies with the Permanent Paper Standard issued by the National Information Standards Organization (Z39.48-1984). 10 98765432 11
Copyright Acknowledgments The author and publisher gratefully acknowledge permission for use of the following material: Excerpts from ''Supper in Beaucaire" by Napoleon Bonaparte. Reprinted by permission of Peters, Fraser, & Dunlop Limited, on behalf of Sir Christopher Frayling, ©: as printed in the original volume. "To Joseph Bonaparte, Paris, June 22, 1792" "To Citizeness Bonaparte, April 3, 1796," "Constitution Making, September 19, 1797," and "Continental Blockade, January 10, 1810." Copyright © 1998 by Prion Books Ltd. Reprinted by permission.
CONTENTS
Illustrations
vii
Series Foreword
iX
Preface
xiii
Acknowledgments
xv
Chronology of Events
xvii X
Chapter 1
Napoleon Bonaparte: An Overview
1
Chapter 2
The Structure of Napoleonic France
25
Chapter 3
Napoleonic Society: The New Regime
47
Chapter 4
Dai[y Life in Napoleonic France
69
Chapter 5
Napoleon and the French Armies
89
Chapter 6
War Makes Rattling Good History
111
Chapter 7
The Legend of the Eagle
147
Biographical Sketches: Significant Persons in the Age of Napoleon 161 Primary Documents of the Napoleonic Era, 1799-1815
175
Annotated Bibliography
201
Index
213
A photo essay follows page 110.
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ILLUSTRATIONS
Tables Table 1.1 Family of Napoleon Bonaparte Table 5.1 Composition of the Grand Army, August 29, 1805 Table 5.2 French Casualties by Year, 1803-1814 Maps Map 6.1 Battle of Austerlitz, December 2, 1805 Map 6.2 The Extent of the Napoleonic Empire, 1810-1812 Map 7.1 The Waterloo Campaign and the Battle of Waterloo, June 18, 1815
20 97 106
122 135 151
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SERIES FOREWORD
American statesman Adlai Stevenson stated that "We can chart our future clearly and wisely only when we know the path which has led to the present." This series, Greenwood Guides to Historic Events 1500-1900, is designed to illuminate that path by focusing on events from 1500 to 1900 that have shaped the world. The years 1500 to 1900 include what historians call the Early Modern Period (1500 to 1789, the onset of the French Revolution) and part of the modern period (1789 to 1900). In 1500, an acceleration of key trends marked the beginnings of an interdependent world and the posing of seminal questions that changed the nature and terms of intellectual debate. The series closes with 1900, the inauguration of the twentieth century. This period witnessed profound economic, social, political, cultural, religious, and military changes. An industrial and technological revolution transformed the modes of production, marked the transition from a rural to an urban economy, and ultimately raised the standard of living. Social classes and distinctions shifted. The emergence of the territorial and later the national state altered man's relations with and view of political authority. The shattering of the religious unity of the Roman Catholic world in Europe marked the rise of a new pluralism. Military revolutions changed the nature of warfare. The books in this series emphasize the complexity and diversity of the human tapestry and include political, economic, social, intellectual, military, and cultural topics. Some of the authors focus on events in U.S. history such as the Salem Witchcraft Trials, the American Revolution, the abolitionist movement, and the Civil War. Others analyze European topics, such as the Reformation
X
Series Foreword
and Counter Reformation and the French Revolution. Still others bridge cultures and continents by examining the voyages of discovery, the Atlantic slave trade, and the Age of Imperialism. Some focus on intellectual questions that have shaped the modern world, such as Darwin's Origin of Species or on turning points such as the Age of Romanticism. Others examine defining economic, religious, or legal events or issues such as the building of the railroads, the Second Great Awakening, and abolitionism. Heroes (e.g., Lewis and Clark), scientists (e.g., Darwin), military leaders (e.g., Napoleon), poets (e.g., Byron), stride across its pages. Many of these events were seminal in that they marked profound changes or turning points. The Scientific Revolution, for example, changed the way individuals viewed themselves and their world. The authors, acknowledged experts in their fields, synthesize key events, set developments within the larger historical context, and, most important, present a well-balanced, well-written account that integrates the most recent scholarship in the field. The topics were chosen by an advisory board composed of historians, high school history teachers, and school librarians to support the curriculum and meet student research needs. The volumes are designed to serve as resources for student research and to provide clearly written interpretations of topics central to the secondary school and lowerlevel undergraduate history curriculum. Each author outlines a basic chronology to guide the reader through often confusing events and a historical overview to set those events within a narrative framework. Three to five topical chapters underscore critical aspects of the event. In the final chapter the author examines the impact and consequences of the event. Biographical sketches furnish background on the lives and contributions of the players who strut across this stage. Ten to fifteen primary documents ranging from letters to diary entries, song lyrics, proclamations, and posters, cast light on the event, provide material for student essays, and stimulate a critical engagement with the sources. Introductions identify the authors of the documents and the main issues. In some cases a glossary of selected terms is provided as a guide to the reader. Each work contains an annotated bibliography of recommended books, articles, CD-ROMs, Internet sites, videos, and films that set the materials within the historical debate.
Series Foreword
XI
These works will lead to a more sophisticated understanding of the events and debates that have shaped the modern world and will stimulate a more active engagement with the issues that still affect us. It has been a particularly enriching experience to work closely with such dedicated professionals. We have come to know and value even more highly the authors in this series and our editors at Greenwood, particularly Kevin Ohe. In many cases they have become more than colleagues; they have become friends. To them and to future historians we dedicate this series. Linda S. Frey University of Montana Marsha L. Frey Kansas State University
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PREFACE
While the Napoleonic era comprises only a decade and a half of European history (1799-1815), the changes that the era brought to France and Europe were monumental. Napoleon brought order out of the chaos of the French Revolution and preserved revolutionary equality of opportunity. His troops took revolutionary ideas and the Napoleonic tenets of governmental organization across Europe. He was enamored with detail and had a prodigious memory for people, events, and projects. He dissected everything—from his relations with women, to the design of imperial monuments, soup kitchens and submarines, to casualty counts on the battlefield. His picture was proudly displayed on the walls of peasant homes, and he could rely on a majority of the survivors of Europe's most horrifying campaigns to fight with him again. He sent armies across the length and breadth of Europe, and he once said that he would not notice a million deaths. He was obsessed with taming Great Britain in order to create a greater France to control Europe. He was a visionary, a pragmatist, a cynical opportunist, and certainly a man of contradictions. But, he was also the man for whom the era was named. Although the bicentennial of Napoleon's birth has passed, the first decade of the twenty-first century will commemorate his coronation on December 2, 1804; the creation of the Grande Armee; the inauguration of the Legion d'Honneur; his victory at Austerlitz; his reorganization of France; and the promulgation of his law codes. And then there will be June 18, 2015, the anniversary of Waterloo. Each year a wealth of books on the Napoleonic era arrives in bookstores throughout the world. The volumes may be picture-filled coffee table books, analytical studies,
Xiv
Preface
period memoirs in the original language or in translation, intriguingly titled explorations of the era, biographies of contemporaries, or an addition to the number of military histories that continue to be published. It is not surprising to ask: another book on Napoleon? This volume in the Greenwood Guides to Historic Events 1500-1900, has a specific purpose. Built around the life and actions of Napoleon, it is also the study of the era and its impact on the people who lived through it, whether they were members of Napoleon's court society, foreigners, inventors, soldiers, workers who passed an afternoon under the red umbrellas of their local drinking establishments, or residents of the areas that the Napoleonic armies annexed or occupied. It provides an overview of the historical debates that surround Napoleon while still being a general text for anyone new to this period of history. Chapter 1 sets the stage for the Napoleonic era with an overview of the life of Napoleon who was born on one island—Corsica—and died on another—St. Helena. From his origins on Corsica, it traces his Corsican nationalism, his baptism in revolutionary ideas, and his early military challenges and triumphs. In Chapter 2 one meets the First Consul, whose position was first achieved through a coup d'etat and then finalized by popular vote. He used his prodigious energy to bring peace and then to conduct the most systematic and comprehensive organization that France had ever known. Chapters 3 and 4 trace the changes that took place in everyday life for Napoleon's notables, his bourgeoisie, and working class men and women. Napoleon's creation of the Grand Army, his military maxims, and the lives of his soldiers form the contents of Chapter 5, followed by a narrative and analysis of the Napoleonic wars in Chapter 6. Chapter 7 concludes with the Napoleonic legend—first, his extraordinary return from exile to lead the French again; and second, the legend after his death as represented by two hundred years of writings, debate, commentary, and popular culture. The Age of Napoleon also includes a chronology of events, several illustrative maps and tables, period illustrations drawn from the collection at the Bibliotheque nationale de France in Paris, and primary source documents ranging from a condensed version of Napoleon's first published political essay, to selected letters, and memoirs of his contemporaries. The book concludes with biographies of key figures during the period, an annotated bibliography, and a general subject index.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I owe a debt of gratitude to those individuals who allowed me the opportunity to write this book. First, my greatest thanks are owed to Linda Frey and Marsha Frey, the editors of this series, who believed that I would do justice to Napoleon beyond the battlefields and the widely known anecdotes. Second, I owe thanks to my colleagues in academe who assisted me in a wealth of ways: Gary Shapiro, Dean of Arts and Sciences at Central Michigan University who provided a grant to assist me in locating illustrations in Paris; Thomas Sosnowski at Kent State University who provided insight and helpful suggestions; and my students who always provide inspiration for my projects. I also offer my remerciements to the staff of the engravings section of the Bibliotheque nationale in Paris for leading me to the right catalogues and collections; to Sheila Clayton, Jeri Harm, and Jill Hosier, who have maintained just the right amount of encouragement in the midst of crises in the Deans Office. I owe additional thanks to Florida Southern College for allowing me to begin my position a week and a half late, since I was still in Paris on research. I would be remiss not to acknowledge Ron and Pat Currie who lent me their house in Scotland for my last writing frenzy. Finally, I owe particular thanks to my husband who rarely has a vacation because of my vocation, and to Orson Beecher and Donald Horward, whose instruction in French history continues to inspire me. And, finally, I thank the supportive staff at Greenwood Press for their thoughtful and thorough assistance. As any author should rightfully acknowledge, the errors of fact or interpretation are mine alone.
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CHRONOLOGY OF EVENTS
1768 May 15
France acquires Corsica
1769 August 15
Birth of Napoleon Bonaparte in Ajaccio, Corsica
1779 January 1
Napoleon enrolls at Autun to learn French
April 23
Napoleon transfers to military school at Brienne
1785 October 19
Napoleon completes the program of study at Brienne and is admitted to the Ecole militaire, the school of future generals in Paris
September
Napoleon commissioned as a second lieutenant in artillery at Valence, France
1789 July 14
Fall of the Bastille in Paris signals the outbreak of the French Revolution
1791 April 1
Napoleon promoted to first lieutenant
October 1
Constitution of 1791 creates a constitutional monarchy
1792 April 20
Declaration of war against Austria
Chronology of Events
XVIII
May 28
Napoleon arrives in Paris and is present for the assault on the Tuileries (June 20) and fall of the monarchy (August 10) Napoleon promoted to captain
September 21
French National Convention proclaims the First French Republic
1793 August
Publication of Napoleons Supper in Beaucaire
September
Napoleon commands the artillery against the English in and around Toulon
December 22
Napoleon promoted to brigadier general after the successful capture of Toulon
1794 July
Fall of Robespierre and the end of the radical Jacobin Revolution; revolutionary month of Thermidor
August 9-24
Napoleon imprisoned as a supporter of Robespierre and the Jacobins
1795 June 22
Napoleon appointed brigadier general in the Army of the West, but remains in Paris
August 20
Napoleon appointed to the Bureau Topographique of the French government
August 22
Constitution of 1795 voted into existence creating a new government called the Directory, 1795-1799
September 15
Napoleon's name is stricken from the officer list because of his refusal to accept a post in the Army of the West
October 5
Napoleon suppresses a major uprising against the constitution with the "Whiff of Grapeshot." This event is also called the 13 th Vendemiaire from its date on the revolutionary calendar.
October 26
Napoleon assigned as commander of the Army of the Interior
1796 March 2
Napoleon assigned as commander of the Army of Italy
Chronology of Events
XIX
March 9
Napoleon marries Josephine de Beauharnais
March 26
Napoleon reaches his headquarters at Nice, opening the First Italian Campaign against the Austrians
May 10
Battle of Lodi (Italy)
November 15-17 Battle of Arcola (Italy) 1797 May-July
Creation of the new Republic of Venice, Ligurian Republic, Cisalpine Republic
October 17
Treaty of Campo Formio signed, ending the First Italian Campaign
December 6
Napoleon assigned as commander of the Army of England
1798 February 15
Creation of the Roman Republic
March 29
Creation of the Helvetic Republic
April
Napoleon assigned as general-in-chief of the Army of the Orient
Julyl
Egyptian campaign begins with Napoleon's landing at Alexandria
July 21
Battle of the Pyramids
August 1
Battle of the Nile
December 29
Formation of the Second Coalition against France
1799 March-May
Siege of Acre in the Egyptian Campaign
October 9
Napoleon returns to France from Egypt
November 9-10
Coup of 18 Brumaire brings Napoleon to power as First Consul
December 25
Constitution of 1799 (VIII) creates the Consulate
December
Amnesty granted in the Vendee
1800 January 6
Bank of France created
February 17
Local governments reorganized
May 15-23
Napoleon crosses the Alps at the St. Bernard Pass in the Second Italian Campaign
Chronology of Events
XX
June 14
Battle of Marengo
December 24
Unsuccessful assassination attempt against Napoleon (Infernal Machine)
1801 February 9
Treaty of Luneville signed between France and Austria
July 15
Concordat finalized with Pope Pius Vll
September
French forces evacuated from Egypt
October
Peace assured with Russia and Portugal; commercial treaties finalized
1802 March 25
Peace of Amiens concluded with Britain
April 8
Concordat of 1801 along with the Organic Articles promulgated in France
April 26
Emigres granted amnesty to return to France
May 19
Legion of Honor created
May
Slavery reinstituted in the colonies; War in the
August 2
Vendee ends Consulate for Life approved by plebiscite (Constitution of X)
September
Insurrection begins in Saint Domingue
1803 March-April
Holy Roman Empire reorganized
April 12
Creation of the livret for all workers
May 3
France sells Louisiana Territory to the United States
November 30
Saint Domingue declares independence from France
1804 March 21
Napoleonic Code inaugurated
May 18
Constitution of XII creates the First French Empire
December 2
Napoleon crowned as Emperor of the French in the Cathedral of Notre Dame
1805 January
Levy of 60,000 soldiers for the international war
May 26
Napoleon crowned King of Italy in Milan
XXi
Chronology of Events
August 9
Third Coalition formed against France
October 21
Defeat of the Franco-Spanish fleet at Trafalgar by Lord Nelson
December 2
French victory at the Battle of Austerlitz
December 26
Treaty of Pressburg signed with Austria
1806 March-June
Creation of the satellite kingdoms: Naples, Holland, Berg
May
British invoke the Orders-in-Council blockading the Continent (Brest to the Elbe River)
July 12
Creation of the Confederation of the Rhine
July
Fourth Coalition mobilizes against France
August 6
Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire
November 21
Napoleon inaugurates the Continental System with the Berlin Decrees
1807 January
British expand the Orders-in-Council
June 14
Battle of Friedland
July 7-9
Treaties of Tilsit signed between France, Russia, and Prussia Creation of the Grand Duchy of Warsaw
November
First phase of the Peninsular War begins Portuguese royal family flees to Brazil; French armies enter Lisbon
December 17
Napoleon expands the Continental System with the Milan Decrees
1808 March 17
Creation of the Imperial University
May 2
Dos de Mayo uprising in Madrid
July 7
Joseph Bonaparte proclaimed King of Spain
August 1
Joachim Murat proclaimed King of Naples
July-August
French armies evacuate Madrid French armies evacuate Portugal after Convention of Cintra
Chronology of Events
XXII
December 13 1809 March May 17 June 11 July 6 July 5-6 October 14 December 15 1810 April 1
July 9 December 13
1811 March 20
Napoleon enters Madrid victoriously British withdraw to Portugal Second French invasion of Portugal Papal States annexed to France Pope Pius VII excommunicates Napoleon French troops arrest the Pope Battle of Wagram Treaty of Schonbrunn with Austria Napoleon divorces Josephine by Senatus consultum Napoleon marries Marie-Louise of Austria Napoleon annexes Holland to France Napoleon annexes the north German states to France Russia leaves the Continental System Birth of the King of Rome (Napoleon II), Napoleon's son French armies begin retreat through Spain Massive conscription of 120,000 soldiers
March-April December 1812 Napoleon begins invasion of Russia June 24 September 14 Napoleon occupies Moscow French troops begin retreat from Moscow October 19 Malet attempts coup in Paris October 23 Napoleon reenters Paris December 18 1813 January-February France renews conscription Grand Alliance (Sixth Coalition) formed against June-August Napoleon October 16-19 Battle of Leipzig (Battle of the Nations) French armies retreat
Chronology of Events
XXIII
1814 January
Allies invade France
March 31
Paris surrenders to the Allies
April 6
Napoleon abdicates first to his son and later unconditionally
May 4
Napoleon arrives in Elba as the Emperor of Elba
May 30
First Peace of Paris promulgated
November
Beginning of the Congress of Vienna
1815 February 25
The Flight of the Eagle—Napoleon leaves Elba
March 1
Napoleon lands on French soil
March 20
Napoleon reenters Paris instituting the Hundred Days
June 18
Battle of Waterloo
June 22
Second abdication of Napoleon
July
King Louis XVIII reenters Paris Napoleon surrenders to the British
October 16
General Bonaparte arrives at St. Helena
November 20
Second Treaty of Paris formalized
1821 May 5
Death of Napoleon at St. Helena
1832 July 22
Death of Napoleon's son, Napoleon Frangois Charles Joseph (Duke of Reichstadt)
1840
Return of Napoleon's remains to France
December 15
Napoleon interred at Les Invalides
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CHAPTER 1
NAPOLEON BONAPARTE: A N OVERVIEW The Fire of Heaven "I am nailed to a rock to be gnawed by a vulture," wrote Napoleon on the island of St. Helena. He had been exiled there in 1815 after his final defeat at Waterloo and his surrender to the English. He was ill, and he scarcely resembled the dashing general who had once led his troops across the Alps into Italy and across the battlefields of Europe. On that rocky wart of an island in the South Atlantic where Napoleon had been forced to spend his remaining years, he was consumed by the memory of his power and was gnawed by the powerlessness that had become his fate. He was isolated from his admirers and most of his friends; he was kept under the watch of his English jailers, as he thought of them. His residence was less than a cottage by his standards and no more than a "gentleman's country seat" by the standards of the elite, elegant, and powerful people of Europe; nonetheless, Longwood House was where he finished his life. He had never willingly retired, and he had little to do at St. Helena except to reflect on his life, his accomplishments, and the manner in which he wished to be remembered. His prose poem continued, "Yes, I have stolen the fire of Heaven and made a gift of it to France." 1 Between August 15, 1769, and May 5, 1821, the dates of Napoleon Bonaparte's birth and death, it would not be an exaggeration to say that the Western world was altered dramatically and permanently. His armies had spanned Europe from Portugal on the west to Russia on the east. His satellite kingdoms had stretched from Holland on the north to Italy on the south. He had once fancied a worldwide empire, and he had looked to the east: the Levant and the Orient. He had looked also to the west
2
THE AGE OF NAPOLEON
and sent his troops to Saint Domingue (Haiti). He had visualized a political and economic community in Europe (albeit with French hegemony)—a common coinage, common laws, and unified diplomacy and trade—long before the European Economic Community of post-World War II Europe was created or the Treaty of Maastricht was ever contemplated. When Napoleon looked back on that period of history with his companions at St. Helena, he took pleasure in laying the groundwork for its interpretation. He said, in his confident way, "Posterity will judge only by the facts." 2 And facts for this period abound. Among the primary sources of the Napoleonic era are 32 volumes of Napoleon's correspondence, 28 of which average 700 pages each and in total contain some 22,067 letters and documents. There are hundreds of volumes of decrees and legislation that provide an official chronicle of the French government, and articles and essays from the contemporary press are available as well. Cartons of other Napoleonic records fill archives throughout France and Europe. Regardless of what Napoleon said—that the facts would pronounce all judgments on his period—even he knew that more than simple facts, dates, narratives, and names would be necessary to create a portrait of the age and of himself. Time and history's abiding fascination with the small, slightly darkcomplexioned Corsican have left a legacy that is sometimes complimentary to the point of hagiography and sometimes thoroughly damning, but the bibliography is massive. Commemorations of the bicentennial of Napoleon's birth in 1969, for example, brought forward hundreds of books and articles to join the 100,000 titles that had already been catalogued by historian-bibliographer Friedrich M. Kircheisen by 1912. In that same year, the Revue des etudes napoleoniennes was inaugurated in France to serve as a sounding board for scholarly research. Since then, the Revue has been joined by dozens of other journals and reviews during the twentieth century. In the United States, groups like the Consortium on Revolutionary Europe began meeting in 1972 to give presentations and discuss current research on the revolutionary and Napoleonic era. Annually, the Consortium publishes its Proceedings and Selected Papers. In recent years, Internet sites have further expanded Napoleonic scholarship. They include the Web site of the Napoleonic Alliance that was established for scholars, interested parties, and students of the period, and the Dutch omnibus site (in English) called the
Napoleon Bonaparte: An
Overview
Napoleon Bonaparte Internet Guide. The site of the French Napoleonic Foundation (also in English translation) includes an internet magazine, illustrations, a library, and receives 20,000 hits a month. 3 Further sources can be found in the bibliography at the end of this volume. What does all of this mean? Certainly there is no scarcity of interest in Napoleon even today, and judgments about history, even those that we believe to be firmly grounded in facts, bear different interpretations and conclusions. Facts do not speak for themselves. They are found in a variety of sources, for example, government documents, correspondence, memoirs and recollections, plans and maps, places and place names, ephemera and artifacts. They provide the basis for history and its visions and revisions. They allow us to consider this period again. So it is, from thousands of documents and later interpretations, that Napoleon has been described as a modern tyrant, a dictator like Hitler, a new Alexander the Great, a caesar, a romantic tempered by Realpolitik, an heir of the Revolution, the reincarnation of an eighteenth-century enlightened despot, a masterful opportunist, or a genius who blundered into glory.4 As historian Alan Schom reminded us in his recent book on Napoleon, "Being neutral about Napoleon has never been easy."5 While Schom was speaking about Europeans who remain extremely divided about their interpretations of the Napoleonic era, the same could be said for most writers about the period. What Napoleonic historians have tried to do is to lay out the evidence for comparison, search the facts and sources for internal inconsistencies and biases, and then come to conclusions about the man who so dominated Europe. What we do know, when all is said and done, is that a period of nearly two decades of history was named the Age of Napoleon and the title remains the same today.
Very Little Time to Be a Child Five years before Napoleon Bonaparte was born on the island of Corsica, the famous English essayist James Boswell traveled there. The year was 1764, and Boswell described the small island as "agreeable," not so far from the coasts of France and Italy, with a temperate climate and over 200,000 inhabitants, most of whom were illiterate and lived primitively by European standards. The people were "frank, open, lively, and
3
4
THE ACE OF NAPOLEON
bold, with a certain roughness of manner."^ The island contained a variety of flora and fauna, good harbors and rolling hills, and most noticeably an incredible, passionate, powerful patriotism. Boswell's visit, which brought Corsica into the European vocabulary, came the same year that Carlo Buonaparte, Napoleon's future father, married Letizia Ramolina. At that time, the island was still under the legal control of the republic of Genoa. For a decade, however, the Corsicans had treated themselves as independent, but disputes with the Genoese had left a legacy of bloodshed. In 1768, the Genoese gave up their hold on Corsica, selling it to the French. The French then dispatched a government official known as an intendant to oversee their new territory, but they were met with hostility equal to Corsican hostility to the Genoese. The French had no recourse but to send an additional 4,000 seasoned troops to deal strongly with the Corsican insurgents. The success of the French sent the battered but still belligerent leader of the Corsican patriots, Pasquale Paoli, fleeing to England with many of his supporters. Carlo Buonaparte, a Corsican patriot at heart, considered fleeing with his countrymen but chose to remain on the island to support his wife and first son. Carlo Buonaparte resolutely attached himself to the new government, both as a realist and as an opportunist. He was not so different from many other Corsicans. Carlo, who carried with him generations of noble lineage on the island, saw an advantage in serving the new French government, and he used his education and training in the law to secure a position as a royal assessor. In the summer of 1769, Carlo and Letizia became the parents of Napoleone, whom Carlo called Nabulio. 7 He may have been named for a distant member of the family or the name may have been given to him because of his birth on August 15, the birth date of an obscure saint of the same name. In any case, Napoleon was the second surviving child of the couple and the second son to be born. His mother, who was among the most beautiful women of Corsica, was chestnut haired, with dark eyes, an aquiline nose, and an air of nobility. She had been 14 at the time of her marriage to Carlo and was still only 18 when Napoleon was born. She had been given little formal education and had been taught almost exclusively in her role as a mother, as was customary in late eighteenth-century social circles. Out of that environment, Letizia became a strong matriarch and a severe steward to her eight children
Napoleon Bonaparte: An
Overview
while learning to manage family affairs in the absence of her husband, who was frequently away on business. 8 "I was born when my country was dying," Napoleon wrote about Corsica. He painted a scene of "thirty thousand Frenchmen disgorged upon our shores . . . drowning the throne of Liberty in a sea of blood." It was a "spectacle that offended my infant eyes. My cradle was surrounded, from the very day of my birth by the cries of the dying, the groans of oppression, and the tears of despair." 9 Above all, Napoleon had learned to be a Corsican patriot, vehemently opposed to all things French. His writing was hyperbole, of course, but Napoleon had always been passionate about the things in which he believed and the causes that he embraced. He was irascible, quarrelsome, quick to pick on his older brother Joseph, and the only one of the Bonaparte siblings who was not nursed by his mother. When he later described his early years, he noted, "I feared nobody, beating one, scratching another; making myself redoubtable to all. It was my brother Joseph who most often had to suffer." Napoleon concluded with a certain pride, "He was slapped, bitten, scolded, and I had already complained against him before he had time to recover himself." 10 There is no doubt that Napoleon's Corsican experience influenced his personality and framed many of his views. There was always a certain clannishness about him, and his competitiveness was extraordinary. By the time Napoleon was nine, his father had risen well within the Franco-Corsican hierarchy of the island. He had qualified for French nobility based on his Corsican claims to the aristocracy, and then Carlo obtained a royal scholarship for Napoleon, in whom he saw more promise for the military than Joseph. The scholarship, which had been designated as a royal scholarship for noble boys who could document their poverty and literacy, first sent Napoleon to Autun to learn French and then to boarding school to complete his education, with the hopes that he might later qualify to enter the prestigious Ecole Militaire in Paris. After three months of language instruction in 1779 to make him marginally fluent, Napoleon moved to Brienne where he stayed for five and a half years, only seeing his mother and father once. The regimen was harsh, but Napoleon thrived on his studies. While he was ridiculed for the way he spoke French (as though he had "straw in his nose," a play on the way he pronounced his own name) and his inveterate Corsican
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THE ACE OF NAPOLEON
patriotism, Napoleon concentrated on his work. Five and a half years later, not yet 15 years of age, he went off to Paris to learn the art of war. If there were influences on Napoleon that came from these early years of his life, they would include his isolation from others, partially imposed by those around him and partially imposed by himself, and his interest in mathematics and history, almost to the exclusion of everything else. He also exhibited feelings of responsibility toward his family since the death of his father, continued contempt for the French oppressors of his island even though his studies were the result of their largesse, a lack of interest in religion bordering on agnosticism, and a marked seriousness of temperament. Napoleon's graduation certificate from Brienne catalogued those years: "Constitution and health, excellent; character, obedient, amenable, honest, grateful; conduct, perfectly regular; he has throughout distinguished himself by his steady work in mathematics. He knows his history and geography pretty well. Fencing and dancing very poor." 11 Napoleon had no particular interest in social graces, as his later behavior would attest. His handwriting was cramped and hard to decipher; his mastery of French, his second language, left much to be desired. But he was quick to learn those things that interested him and what he wanted most was admission to the school of France's finest officers. In October 1784, Napoleon entered the Ecole Militaire in Paris, where scarcely a year later he graduated and was commissioned as a second lieutenant of artillery stationed at Valence, France. Much has been made of his rank of 42 n d in a class of 58, but he had passed through France's leading military school in one year rather than two or three, and he had been the first Corsican to do so, working in a language and a society that he had known for less than seven years. It was now 1785, and Napoleon Bonaparte was 16 years old. For the next seven and a half years, Napoleon lived a double life. In one life, he continued his serious military experience, as he fulfilled his responsibilities and read more history and literature. In the other, he roamed Paris, returned to his roots in Corsica, organized patriot groups, and found himself immersed in the writings of Rousseau in which he found renewed passion. Likewise, he was fascinated by England and catalogued all of her possessions, analyzed Frederick II of Prussia (Frederick the Great), looked to the Orient for inspiration, and wrote both fiction and military tracts. Twice before the Revolution he asked for and
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received leave from his commission in the French army to return to Corsica. Four more times after 1789 he went as well, one of them as a lieutenant colonel in the Corsican Volunteers, still hopeful that he could assist his countrymen in expelling the French occupation. Ultimately his partnership with Paoli, whom Napoleon once held up as the savior of Corsica, proved to be doomed as was the liberation of Corsica from France. His family was forced to flee from Corsica; Napoleon renegotiated his military career, which he had almost lost because of his protracted absences (29 months in all); and he committed firmly to France as his homeland. Gone were the impassioned words that he had said about his island and his denunciation of the "French chains" that had enveloped it. "In the eyes of God," he had written describing what France had been doing to Corsica, "the worst crime is to tyrannize over men." 12 That era of his life was over; he resolved to move on.
They Have Seen Nothing Yet When the French Revolution began in 1789, Napoleon was initially more concerned about what was going on in Corsica than what was occurring in France. Shortly, however, neither he nor anyone else could ignore the events in and around Paris that moved France closer to constitutional monarchy and then to republicanism in a short three and a half years. The Old Regime, as the period predating the Revolution came to be called, was over. Napoleon had been born a citizen of France, and as such, he would be designated as an active citizen by the government, giving him all of the rights provided by the new French order. 13 For success, he no longer needed the aristocratic coat of arms that his father had worked so hard to guarantee. All he needed was to take advantage of the opportunities that were opening before him. During the decade between 1789 and 1799 when Napoleon assumed the mantle of government, his rise was neither linear nor meteoric. During the first four years of that decade, Napoleon's double life continued. Alternating between Corsica and France for extended periods of time, by the summer of 1792, Napoleon learned that he had lost his regular commission in the French army. French politics were growing increasingly divisive, King Louis XVI was charading as a constitutionalist while intriguing against his detractors, and the French declared war against Austria in April of that year. The French economy continued
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THE AGE OF NAPOLEON
to decline, bread remained scarce, and the army officer corps was sorely lacking qualified personnel. In spite of Napoleon's mixed allegiances, his commission was returned to him, and Napoleon was promoted to captain. It is not possible to place Napoleon in early French revolutionary events because of his disinterest in French affairs, his preoccupation with his family, and his obsession with Corsica. Napoleon had, in fact, missed all of the early events of the French Revolution including the calling of the Estates-General in 1788, one of the most severe winters in eighteenthcentury French history that damaged an already seriously impaired economy, and the fall of the Bastille. A newly established National Constituent Assembly had abolished the vestiges of feudalism and aristocratic privilege in the late summer of 1789 and had begun work on a written constitution, the first in French history. The Declaration of the Rights of Man had been decreed, although it went unratified by the king for months. The Revolution was speeding forward as leaders like the abbe EmmanuelJoseph Sieyes; Antoine Barnave; Charles Maurice, prince de Talleyrand; Honore-Gabriel Riquetti, comte de Mirabeau; and Marie Joseph Yves Gilbert du Motier, marquis de Lafayette, brought forward their recommendations for a liberal, constitutional regime to replace absolutism in France. As would become true, Mirabeau had once remarked that the question was not how to propel a revolution; it was how to hold it back once it had achieved momentum. Further, revolutionaries had unceremoniously dismantled the Catholic Church and its formerly inviolate lands while they ceremoniously celebrated the new order, later adopting a revolutionary anthem, reveling in their fraternal consciousness, and establishing a new scheme of revolutionary festivals. Citizenship had taken on real meaning in the new order. Political clubs and associations were widespread and numerous, and they quickly established themselves as serious partisan contenders in national and local politics. When Napoleon arrived in Paris on May 28, 1792, the Revolution was already moving toward its more radical phase. He had nothing to do with the events that had transformed France from a kingdom to a nation and that had transformed Louis XVI from "Louis, by the grace of God, King of France and Navarre," to "Louis, by the grace of God and the Constitution of the State, King of the French." The change from King of France to King of the French was enormous. Subjects had become citizens; the kingdom had become the state. But it should be remembered
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that "Napoleon," as historian J. M. Thompson wrote, had not "made the revolution." Napoleon was only a member of "the generation that inherited it." 14 Spring of 1792 was in many ways pivotal to the French Revolution and, in a very different way, pivotal to Napoleon. The declaration of war, the levy of troops for the international contest, and the continuing civil disarray in France sparked continued partisanship and unrest in the capital. The international war was not going well, yet the king refused to bring troops to Paris for training. Government ministers were replaced, and the Legislative Assembly became more active. It is not surprising that the streets became more active as well. On June 20, 1792, a mixed assemblage of thousands of working class Parisians and local leaders marched to the Assembly and then to the Tuileries Palace, where the royal family had been residing in Paris since they were forced to leave Versailles in the fall of 1789. Napoleon was there, and he chronicled the events to his brother two days later. The mob that overcame the National Guard "mounted cannon against the King's apartments," broke down the entry gates, and dismantled interior doors. The demonstrators were "armed with pikes, hatchets, swords, muskets, spits and pointed stakes." They were excessive, overwrought, and out of control. 15 Napoleon could not countenance the actions of a mob; they could in no way be justified under the guarantees of the Constitution of 1791. But by this time, Napoleon had also ceased to be a supporter of the ineffective king. Inside the Tuileries, away from Napoleon's gaze, the king had smiled benignly to the rabble that had assaulted his palace, raised a pewter cup filled with wine to toast the nation, and placed a red cap of liberty on his head. The crowd had disbanded, but the summer of 1792 was far from over. See Document 1: Napoleons Letter to His Brother Joseph, June 22, 1792 in Primary Source Documents at the end of this book. By August 10, neither a toast to the nation nor a benign smile could save Louis XVI's constitutional position. In a carefully planned assault on the Tuileries beginning with the sounding of the tocsin at midnight the night before, thousands of armed demonstrators laid siege to the palace. The king, not wishing to cause harm, ordered his guards to lay down their weapons, and he and the royal family fled to the Legislative Assembly where they took refuge. As a result, the Tuileries became a scene of bloodshed and carnage as hundreds of the Swiss Guards, the traditional palace detachment, were killed and dismembered in the
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THE AGE OF NAPOLEON
courtyard. Across the street from the assault, Napoleon watched the events unfold. He had heard the bells sounding the assault and made his way through the swirling mob. Accosted by members of that crowd, he had been forced to cry vive la nation (long live the nation) beneath a bloody head mounted on a pike. Ultimately the courtyard that he saw was littered with bodies greater in number than on a battlefield. Bodies of the fallen troops were stripped; according to some sources, women in the mob clipped off the private parts of dead guardsmen "and stuffed them in [the dead soldiers'] gaping mouths." 1 6 In yet another of his letters to his brother Joseph, Napoleon rued the ineffectiveness of the king. If only he had mounted his horse, Napoleon wrote, "victory would have been his." 17 There were to be no more chances for the king, who was removed from office and placed under guard. In the fall of 1793, the government of France declared itself the First French Republic, and four months later the former king was executed. From King of France to King of the French, Louis XVI became simply Citizen Louis Capet who went to the guillotine for his crimes against the people and the nation. By summer of 1793, the entire Bonaparte family was forced to change its way of life, as Napoleon tied his future to the Republic, the powerful Committee of Public Safety, and to Maximilien Robespierre, its most visible member. What ultimately brought about Napoleon's first significant command was Napoleon's allegiance to the principles of the Jacobins and his support from fellow Corsican and government representative, Christophe Saliceti. It was Saliceti who recruited Napoleon for an artillery command, its objective to expel the British navy from the French Mediterranean port city of Toulon. As Napoleon began his successful preparations for forcing the British out of Toulon, he also completed Le Souper de Beaucaire: Dialogue entre un Militaire de Varmee de Carteaux, un Marseillais, un Nimois et un Fabricant de Montpellier, sur les evenements qui sont arrives dans le Qi-devant Comtat a Varivee des Marseillais (translated in shortened form as Supper in Beaucaire). This was his first published work, although he had already completed his Corsican Letters and various writings on military affairs and other topics, and had once entered a competition sponsored by the Academy of Lyon. 18 Supper in Beaucaire, however, was different from his earlier works. It was an imaginary conversation between a soldier in Carteaux's army in the south of France (a not particularly veiled image of himself), two conservative
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defenders of Marseilles' decision to resist the Jacobins, a manufacturer from Montpellier, and a man from Nimes. But more importantly, it laid out Napoleon's support for the Jacobin causes that included order and a centralized state authority as well as his belief in military prowess, particularly the efficiency of the artillery and the strength of the troops. As the men dined and debated in the small town of Beaucaire, the soldier took more and more control of the arguments, and by the end of the evening the men from Marseilles were left with the bill for the champagne they had consumed during their evening. Napoleon also took a very practical position in the pamphlet: to support the political leadership that would ultimately be victorious. He had written earlier, "If one must belong to a party, it must be that which triumphs; it is better to be the eater than the eaten."19 An edited version of Supper in Beaucaire is included as Document 2. The British roust from the port of Toulon could not have been more important for Napoleon. Putting together the pieces of a plan that had not been enacted earlier under a less skilled commander, Napoleon mastered the heights around the port so that the siege could take place. The British had little recourse except to withdraw their fleet. In the process of the assault, Napoleon was wounded by a British bayonet, one of only two injuries he received in his career of nearly two decades in harm's way. Although Napoleon was not individually credited for the victory at Toulon, he was well rewarded. He was promoted from lieutenant colonel to brigadier general, and correspondence from the men who had served with him and who had seen him in action was consistently laudatory. He was, according to the Chevalier Du Teil "a most uncommon officer."20 In the meantime, Napoleon continued to work in the south of France under the watchful eye of Saliceti. Through his compatriot, he received the continued support of the Jacobins in Paris. He also participated in the amalgame, strengthening the armies of France by merging the new recruits and volunteers of 1793 with veterans. By the early spring of 1794, Maximilien Robespierre's bother Augustin had also noticed Napoleon. He wrote to his brother, "I add to the names of patriots whom I have mentioned to you citizen Bonaparte, an exceedingly meritorious general in command of the artillery"21 The praise was short lived, as were the lives of Maximilien and Augustin Robespierre and hundreds of their compeers. Napoleon, named so visibly as a Jacobin patriot, was not immune from the proscription that followed the quick
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THE AGE OF NAPOLEON
and bloody coup that unseated the Jacobin stronghold on the Committee of Public Safety in July 1794. If Napoleon had been stationed closer to Paris, one does not know what his fate might have been. As it was, Napoleon was imprisoned in Fort Carre near Antibes as a Jacobin sympathizer and a threat to the new government. Again Saliceti came to his rescue, by obtaining Napoleon's release after only 10 days and then by sending him toward his destiny. Napoleon was transferred to Paris and assigned first to the topographic office of the Army and then to the Army of the West. The latter was an appointment over an infantry brigade serving in the Vendee. But the civil war that had been spawned in the west of France in 1791 by the confiscation of the lands of the Catholic Church and then by its reorganization had grown more bloody. Conscription to fill the armies of France in the international war was the new provocation. In the Vendee, it was brother against brother, family against family, and a traditional church against a revolution. Napoleon's appointment in the Vendee was not what he had in mind, and he refused it. He was well aware, and even remarked, that civil wars bring no military glory to their combatants. Saliceti and Paul Barras, who was also well placed in government circles, managed to keep Napoleon in Paris. Fortune again smiled upon Napoleon as he found himself instrumental in averting the next constitutional crisis. On October 5, 1795, mobs assembled and began their march against the Convention (legislative body of France) that had presented a new constitution to France. While the constitution had been established legally, it contained provisions that some Parisians found particularly abhorrent. Simply, a codicil to the constitution preserved the power of those men who had unseated Robespierre and the Jacobins. The preservation of one group of revolutionaries over another, however, was not precisely the problem. Rather, the issue was that the economic crisis that beset France continued unabated and the international war raged on, in spite of the promises of those men who remained in power. Parisians asked why the new Constitution of 1795 was a more legitimate solution to the problems of France than a royalist restoration. In the midst of this turmoil, Barras turned to the youthful brigadier general Napoleon Bonaparte to defend the new government (soon to be called the Directory). That is precisely what Napoleon did. Unafraid to use serious crowd control, Napoleon brought in forty cannons, arrayed
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them to aim down the narrow streets that led to the Convention, and filled the cannon barrels with nails, scrap iron, and chains. No commander had ever before taken such strong action against a revolutionary mob in Paris. What took place became known, half a century later, as the "Whiff of Grapeshot." 22 As the crowds marched on the Convention, they were mowed down in a bloodbath of shrapnel spewing from the mouths of the cannons. Napoleon saved the new government, and his efforts went exactly to plan. Casualties on his side were light, and he reported to his brother Joseph that "I haven't had a scratch." 23 His invincibility now became an aura. Napoleon's Parisian adventure in 1795 brought him into the social circles of the capital, into the new society that was much less inhibited than it had been under Jacobin control in 1793-1794, and into the arms of Marie-Josephine-Rose Tascher de La Pagerie [de Beauharnais]. Uncharacteristically foolish and giddy for this brief period of his life, Napoleon drank in the "luxury, enjoyment and the arts" that defined a reborn Paris where life was exceedingly agreeable. Napoleon wrote, "Anyhow, who could be a pessimist in this mental workshop, this whirlwind of activity?" 24 He frequented book stalls, took in public lectures, and enjoyed the sight of scantily clad, beautiful women who could be seen everywhere. In the salons of Paris, he courted the widow of an Old Regime aristocrat who had lost his life during the Terror. More important, perhaps, was Josephine de Beauharnais's well-known former liaison with Barras, who had given Napoleon his opportunity for recognition in the "Whiff of Grapeshot" and who later supported Napoleon's appointment as commander of the Army of Italy. In December 1795, Napoleon was agog with Josephine's charms: "I awake all filled with you. Your image, and the intoxicated pleasures of last night, allow my senses no rest." 25 Josephine, who had been born in Martinique, was a quintessential hostess and a model of perfection in the arts of grace and charm. To the socially inept Napoleon, she must have appeared a goddess. See Document 3 for one of Napoleon's early letters to Josephine. Also see the biographies at the conclusion of this book for more information on Josephine. On March 9, 1796, Napoleon married Josephine, in spite of her two children by a previous marriage and in spite of the fact that she was six years his senior in age. In only two days he was on his way to Nice to
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take up the command that would make his name a household word and begin his progress toward the throne of France. When Napoleon arrived to take command of the Army of Italy, the French government (the Directory) saw it only as a diversion from the more significant contest that pitted the main French armies against Austria, the only remaining continental power in the First Coalition against France. What neither the Directory nor the seasoned, veteran commanders in Italy could know was that Napoleon intended to change the rules of war. In the end, not only did Napoleon make Italy the main theatre of the war, his personal courage so won over his troops that the aura of his invincibility was renewed time and time again. He created his own war chest, supplied his men, and negotiated his own military and diplomatic settlements. By October 1797, the contest was over and the Treaty of Campo Formio was signed, ending the First Coalition. Only Britain remained in the contest against republican France. Napoleon had managed to do what no other commander in the French military had achieved at that time. It was "a miracle of leadership," according to historian Owen Connelly 2 6 What Napoleon had done was to show his commanders, most of whom were older and taller than he, that war required infinite information, strategic planning, excellent rapport with his men, and a cool deference to loss of life. He accepted no sloth or lack of preparation from his commanders; he was an homme terrible (a man who brought fear to their hearts and beings). Andre Massena, who later joined Napoleons closest circle of friends and companions, first saw his new army commander as a small, unimpressive general who looked out of his depth. Napoleon was only 26 at the time and in command of one of Frances five armies. Massena later admitted, however, that when Napoleon placed his general's hat on his head, he "seemed two feet taller." 2/ Few later questioned Massena's analysis, especially when the campaign was dispatched with such efficiency and so many rewards for the French republic. See the biographies at the end of this book for more information on Massena. In concluding this First Italian Campaign, as it came to be called, Napoleon had already begun a reorganization of Europe that would characterize his later empire. Napoleon shepherded into place the creation of the Ligurian Republic from Genoa and the construction of the Cisalpine Republic from parts of Austria, papal territories, and Venetia. It should be remembered that, at the beginning of the nineteenth cen-
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tury, modern Italy did not yet exist. The Italian peninsula was comprised of a number of independent states and principalities until the last half of that century when Italian unification was achieved. From what had existed, however, Napoleon moved boundaries, organized diplomatic conferences, and exchanged islands. In the process he spread the benefits of the Revolution as he saw them—the abolition of feudalism and the guild system and the implementation of civil liberties in the areas where French troops passed. By 1797 only Britain remained an enemy of France, and Napoleon was again in Paris. He had been elected to the prestigious Institut de France; and he felt, for the first time, the jealousies of government officials and military leaders who suddenly realized how visible and potentially powerful he had become. This time, Napoleon's plans were in league with Foreign Minister Talleyrand's program that looked to the East for relief from the British. The point was to attack Britain through her back door—the British trade through Egypt and the Levant—rather than a direct assault across the Channel that had originally been proposed. Napoleon's Egyptian campaign was memorable for its sheer scale and its aims that were well beyond its military objectives. On May 19, 1798, Napoleon began the Egyptian campaign to bring Britain to its knees and to create a stronghold for the French in the East. When all was said and done 43,000 men, approximately 300 ships of all sizes, several thousand horses, hundreds of artillery pieces, and a group of scientists and scholars to study the treasures of Egypt departed for the Orient. From their first encounter at Malta to protect the Mediterranean, to their Battle of the Pyramids, to their contest in Turkish lands to the north, Napoleon oversaw the operations. Furthermore, he oversaw a complete recreation of the governmental infrastructure in Egypt, including reshaping political boundaries, naming new governmental representatives, building needed hospitals and social care facilities, coining new currency, and trying to make headway in a medieval system of commerce, while respecting religion and local customs. What Napoleon could not guarantee, however, was the skill of his naval commander and the role of the Ottoman Empire in this contest. In both cases he misjudged. Almost upon arrival, his fleet was destroyed at Abukir Bay, and shortly he learned that Talleyrand's representative had failed in negotiations with the Turks. The French could no longer be guaranteed that the Ottoman Empire would not challenge the French inroads into Egypt.
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Regardless, Napoleon declared that he had come with the blessings of the Sultan of Turkey and the Koran, and he promised his men permanent colonies and a share in the wealth of the Orient. Instead, plague and casualties devoured his troops by 1799; yet, Napoleon reported to the Directory, "We lack nothing here. We are bursting with strength, good health, and high spirits." 28 What Napoleon awaited was an opportunity to change the course of French history, much more than the Egyptian campaign was intended to do. As he consolidated what he could, Napoleon also took care to create a legacy and to build his own version of the campaign. He formed the Institute of Egypt in Cairo, and its multivolume Le Description de VEgypte became one of the lasting results of the campaign. The volumes that were published later included the most comprehensive set of plans and drawings of the monuments of Egypt that had ever been prepared or seen in Europe. Napoleon also mastered the art of propaganda. To the Sultan of Darfour and to the Divan of Cairo, Napoleon began his letters, "There is no other god but God, and Mahomet [Mohammed] is his prophet! ' 29 He pledged ecumenism, but he responded in very practical ways: those who supported his occupation were granted their local customs and rights of worship, but those who did not support the French would bear the wrath of Napoleon's military. Napoleon set forward his rules from his headquarters in Cairo: "Instruct an officer in command of the place to decapitate all prisoners taken with arms in their hands. . . . [T]heir headless bodies are to be thrown in the river." 30 The Egyptian campaign, as it turned out, was among the most brutal of the wars of the French republic and empire. As he took on the Turkish armies, who were supported by the British, the sieges became murderous. In one of the sieges, out of Napoleon's 13,000 men, more than one-third were killed in action, left crippled, or left as victims of disease. According to one of Napoleon's subordinates, Jean-Baptiste Kleber, "Bonaparte was the kind of general who needed a monthly income of ten thousand men." 31 As Napoleon turned back toward Cairo and Alexandria from the Turkish lands to the northeast, he learned that the victories of his glorious Italian campaign had been squandered: Naples and Austria were at war with France, along with Turkey and Russia. Almost unnoticed, Napoleon turned over his command, gathered a
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few of his closest military confidants, and sailed for France to establish himself again and to assure his fortune. What he had done, although his letters and army bulletins presented a story to the contrary, was turn "the Egyptian romance, which had begun in a blaze of glory [into] a conspirator's flight."32 To the French, whose appetite had been whetted by stories of the Orient and narratives of the illustrious campaign, it mattered little that the French army was stranded and the objectives of the campaign were never to be achieved. When Napoleon arrived on French shores again, France's borders were endangered by the armies of the new coalition, the Directory government was in disarray after the Conspiracy of Equals and two electoral coups in the previous three years, and the economy had not fully recovered from its malaise. Napoleon, on the other hand, had returned from his glories in Egypt; there was something exotic about him. Furthermore, he was still bathed in his success from Italy nearly three years earlier. Napoleon's timing was impeccable. There was no question that the Directory government needed to be replaced; the question was by what type of new government and by whom. Almost at once Napoleon found himself involved with conspirators who included his former benefactor Barras, his younger brother Lucien, and one of the earliest revolutionaries and constitutionalists, Sieyes. In what came to be called the coup of 18-19 Brumaire (because of its date in November according to the revolutionary calendar), Napoleon and his co-conspirators took over and dissolved the Directory. Napoleon began the "cynical business of politics."33 He constructed a new constitution—the fourth since the Revolution had begun—to create the Consulate of France. In a series of shrewd maneuvers, Napoleon, who had been enlisted in the conspiracy primarily to provide the military power for the coup moved himself into the position of First Consul. The French had seen nothing yet. Returning to the field, Napoleon ended the coalition against France on the continent, made successful overtures to Britain for peace, and by 1801 had begun his plan to remake France. He later noted that he had brought order out of chaos; he had solidified the best of the Revolution.34 "We have finished the romance of the Revolution"; Napoleon told his Council of State in 1800, "history must now begin."35 From then until 1815, it was Napoleon who was puppet master, controlling the strings of history
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18
Work Is My Element From the coup and constitution that brought Napoleon to power until his first abdication, Napoleon was tireless in remaking France and Europe. During those years, both France and Europe were irrevocably changed. Those changes fall into the following categories: Napoleon's search for political stability, his work toward France's economic recovery, the creation of a court society befitting the French, a massive reorganization of the French government including an overhaul of the infrastructure of the state, constitutional reform and a commitment to religious toleration, support for the arts and industry, and an uncompromising commitment to the family—whether it was the larger family of France or the family of each citizen of the fatherland. When Napoleon negotiated the first peace that France had known since 1792, he took great pleasure in reorganizing the French state. "It is the epoch of my life," he said, "in which I have shown the most ability" 3 6 Efficiency was important to the First Consul, but so were stability, civil accord, and a sound infrastructure. At the turn of the nineteenth century, the civil war in the Vendee and elsewhere in France continued and the economy showed improvement sporadically only after 1795; regardless of all of the ideological statements of the French during the Revolution, the rights of citizenship had not been systematically defined, education remained somewhat illusory, society was viewed as coarse and vulgar, and so much needed to be accomplished. In the years between 1801 and 1814, Napoleon's metamorphoses took him from First Consul to Life Consul to Emperor of the French. In each case, a constitution defined Napoleon's growing powers, and a popular vote (a countrywide plebiscite) confirmed the constitutional authority that he was assuming. Napoleons conception of government, as it was transformed in the three constitutions that he designed, was neither a republic nor a constitutional monarchy, both of which the French had tried during the Revolution. Nor did it attempt to combine the two political ideologies; rather, Napoleon prided himself that his constitutions were popular in origin but that in practice, France was a centralized, fundamentally absolutist state. Under his authority as chief of state, one of Napoleon's earliest decisions was to encourage a blending of the nobles who had fled during the Revolution with those Frenchmen who had become the new governing class. Careers, he said,
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should be open to talent and merit. The Old Regime's reliance on aristocratic bloodlines, venality, and privilege was to be erased from republican and imperial France. While the transition was not immediate, Napoleon welcomed back aristocrats whose services he could use, established his own award for talent and merit through the Legion of Honor (that still exists today as one of France's highest honors), organized a civil service devoid of partisan politics, and created a new aristocracy. The society that he fashioned mimicked in some ways the old dynasties of Europe, but he was prepared to compete on equal standing with them. His coronation harkened back to Charlemagne, and he felt perfectly comfortable in making marriage alliances with the ruling families of Europe for his brothers and himself. He was a patron of the arts, public works, and education; although he practiced censorship and was decidedly anti-intellectual when French and foreign intellectuals criticized him. He centralized police authority throughout France, and brigandage and local rivalries were subdued. He created new economic institutions to stabilize the French economy and championed a system of favored status and protective tariffs, not only to expand French industry but to usurp British trade domination. Napoleon also turned to the laws that governed France and to the religious disputes that had unraveled order particularly in the west of France. By 1801, through his actions and the diplomacy of his brother Joseph, he had made a Concordat (an agreement) with the Roman Catholic Church. After a decade, the civil war was finally quieted, and Napoleon had reached a revolutionary settlement with the Church that remained until 1905. He had, through his actions, proclaimed religious toleration that later, in various forms, also included Lutherans, Calvinists, and Jews. As far as the laws of France were concerned, Napoleon achieved what no French leader had ever managed. He created the first comprehensive codification of French civil law, called the Code Napoleon. Undaunted by the magnitude of his endeavors, he oversaw the creation of six additional codes: a criminal code, a code of criminal instruction, a code of civil procedure, a rural code, a commercial code, and a penal code. Finally, he worked toward a Grand Design for Europe—perhaps a federation of nationalities or a greater France (much larger than even Louis XIV had dreamed). It is here that the greatest disagreement among historians may be found. Even Napoleon's own words are not definitive.
19
t Table1.1 1.1
Family of Napoleon Bonaparte CARLO MARIA BONAPARTE = MARIA LETIZIA RAMOLINO 1750-1836 174-6-1785
oseph, Kit ig o f Naples N A P O L E O N m. (1) Josephine Tasc hetan4 King o f Spam 1769-1821 4e la Pagerie 1768-184-4 1763-18U m. Julie Clary 1777-1845
( 2 ) Mane Louise o f Austria 1791-184-7
Lucien,
El sa 1777-1820
Pt-ince o f Canmo 1775-1840
m. Felix Bacciochi, Grand Puke of
m. (1) Catherine Boyer 1773-1800 ( 2 ) Alexan4i-ine 4e Bleschamps Jouberton 1778-1855
Lucca, Parma, Piacenza 1762-1841
Napoleon,
I
King o( Rome, Puke o f Reichstadt 1811-1832
Napoleon Charles 180 2 - 1 8 0 7
I
Louis, King of Holland 1778-1846 m. Hortense 4e Beauharnais 1783-1837
Napoleon Louis 1804-1831
Pau me 1780-1825 m. CD Victor Emmanuel Leclerc 1772-1802 C2) Camillo, Prince Borghese 1775-1832
Charles Louis m. Eugenie Maria Napoleon 4e M o n t i jo (Napoleon III) 1808-1873 Napoleon Louis (Prince Imperial) 1856-1879
Jerome, m. CD Elizabeth Patterson King of Westphalia C2) Catherine o f 1784-1860 I Wurttemberg 1782-1835 Pescen4ants of Jerome an4 Catherine comprise the surviving members of the family
Ca ro line 1782-1839